Apple made some bold claims about its new A5X chip, claiming it would give a 4x graphical boost over Nvidia's Tegra 3. At the same time, the Tegra 3 is a powerhouse of computational processing. So lets put 'em to the test.

Just like Panasonic, Fujitsu’s launching a range of smartphones into Europe and will be showing off its wares at MWC. Now we know a little about one of its new “ultra-high-spec” smartphones -- it’s another beast with a screen over four-inches.

The lucky mobile-loving Italians over at Telefonio have managed to get their mitts on LG’s latest beast-of-a-phone. It looked fast on paper, but the video shows that it absolutely blazes through Ice Cream Sandwich like nothing I’ve seen before – if this is what Tegra 3 can do I’m properly stoked.

The next big version of Windows got a lacklustre reception when it first landed on a tablet. It looked and worked great, yeah, but was knocked for a little clunkiness. Now, it's running on superfast phone guts—and it will be great.

There aren't a lot of secrets left about Nvidia's Tegra 3 quad-core mobile guts; after all, it's already in the Transformer Prime. In fact, the only question left has been what other devices we'll see it in.

I suppose it's not a little ironic that what is easily the best Android tablet of the last year does not look a little bit like an iPad, but a lot like an iPad, and is being sued for trademark infringement—though not by Apple. If you want to be generous, you could say that Asus's Transformer Prime stands on the shoulders of giants. With spiked boots.

Want to know how a quad-core Tegra 3 ARM chip handles the latest iteration of Android? Check out this video from Nvidia showing off an Asus Transformer Prime running Ice Cream Sandwich, just two days after Google released the source code.

Lenovo is not one to sit around and let Asus have all the super-spec'd tablet fun. Engadget has sniffed out a rumour that they'll be bringing their own quad-core Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) very, very soon. Monster fight!